litcritters
This week (Open Session at Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, Emerald Ave - 4PM)
The Man Who Loved the Moon by Zarah Gagatiga
Galactic Vinyl by Elyss Punsalan
Beats by Kenneth Yu
The Quest for Memory by Charles Tan
Last week:
The Carpetmaker's Son by Adreas Eschbach
The Infinite Monkey Theorem by Marshall Moore
Gillian Underground by Michael Jasper, Tim Pratt & Greg Van Eekhout
Don't Ask by Mary Rickert
Next week:
The Shelter of the World by Salman Rushdie
For Solo Cello, op.12 by Mary Robinette Kowal
Fire in the Lake by Chris Roberson
Pervert by Charles Coleman Finlay
The LitCritters are a group of writers who read and readers who write. We read a wide range of texts (from realism to speculative fiction and things in between) to improve our craft and seek to develop well-told stories. The LitCritters are based in Manila and in Dumaguete City (headed by Ian Rosales Casocot). Among our numbers are unpublished authors and multiple award-winners, young people and older folk, students and professionals who all love fiction. If you're interested, drop by one of the Open sessions which we hold twice a month (usually on the 1st and 3rd Saturdays).
You can sign up here and get discussion copies of the stories scheduled for critique.
The Man Who Loved the Moon by Zarah Gagatiga
Galactic Vinyl by Elyss Punsalan
Beats by Kenneth Yu
The Quest for Memory by Charles Tan
Last week:
The Carpetmaker's Son by Adreas Eschbach
The Infinite Monkey Theorem by Marshall Moore
Gillian Underground by Michael Jasper, Tim Pratt & Greg Van Eekhout
Don't Ask by Mary Rickert
Next week:
The Shelter of the World by Salman Rushdie
For Solo Cello, op.12 by Mary Robinette Kowal
Fire in the Lake by Chris Roberson
Pervert by Charles Coleman Finlay
The LitCritters are a group of writers who read and readers who write. We read a wide range of texts (from realism to speculative fiction and things in between) to improve our craft and seek to develop well-told stories. The LitCritters are based in Manila and in Dumaguete City (headed by Ian Rosales Casocot). Among our numbers are unpublished authors and multiple award-winners, young people and older folk, students and professionals who all love fiction. If you're interested, drop by one of the Open sessions which we hold twice a month (usually on the 1st and 3rd Saturdays).
You can sign up here and get discussion copies of the stories scheduled for critique.
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